Sensation part 2    vision
25:37
4 ай бұрын
Sensation part 1
29:59
4 ай бұрын
Perception day 2
36:45
5 ай бұрын
Perception day 1
23:48
5 ай бұрын
AP HUG Unit 1 Part 3
34:23
10 ай бұрын
AP HUG part 2
19:10
10 ай бұрын
APHUG Unit 1 part 1
39:08
10 ай бұрын
LEQ   AP World History
27:38
Жыл бұрын
AP Gov Unit 3 part 1
32:11
Жыл бұрын
AP Gov Unit 1 part 2
36:10
Жыл бұрын
AP Government Unit 1    part 1
36:00
Жыл бұрын
AP Government Unit 5 part 2
45:53
Жыл бұрын
AP Government Unit 5 part 1
38:32
Жыл бұрын
Social Psychology part 2
36:03
3 жыл бұрын
Social Psychology part 1
42:48
3 жыл бұрын
Intelligence part 2
44:31
3 жыл бұрын
Intelligence Day 1
35:08
3 жыл бұрын
Memory part 2
45:03
3 жыл бұрын
Memory part 1
44:08
3 жыл бұрын
Therapy part 2
42:14
3 жыл бұрын
WWII part 2
44:17
3 жыл бұрын
Somatoform and Schizophrenia
35:12
3 жыл бұрын
EOC prep 1960s   1980s
43:43
3 жыл бұрын
Influenza Epidemic 1918
15:29
3 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@translationstations
@translationstations 13 күн бұрын
Enjoyed the vid. Booker T. Washington, as we know it today is, Arts Magnet @ Booker T. Washington. Modern musician alumni include Nora Jones, Edie Brickell, Erykah Badu, to name a few.
@Septemberfarms
@Septemberfarms 21 күн бұрын
You totally missed a huge chunk. Lucy Jane Monroe Browder and her 2 sons Edward and Isham...my 4 generation granparents moved to Dallas in 1845. They owned Browder Springs, the Browder store in old city park. Browder Springs was responsible for the water supply to Dallas. Lucy Jane is the niece of President Monroe. There's so much about the Browder family and their association with Dallas I could never type it all in this comment. My family was a hugely responsible for Dallas but when turn over in their graves if they saw it now. All the info can be researched online.
@butchez73
@butchez73 21 күн бұрын
Thank you very much. When I made this, I started with the pictures then I asked What can I say about this to high school students? If I didn't have pictures, I left it out.
@Septemberfarms
@Septemberfarms 21 күн бұрын
@@butchez73 I would share the pictures I have with you but don't know how to do it on KZfaq. Google Edward C. Browder and Isham Bell Browder...some pics and history of them comes up if you are interested. My great aunt was the head of Dallas Historical society for many years and donated millions to keep old city park open. Because of her our family learned a lot about our family tree and from way back.
@Septemberfarms
@Septemberfarms 21 күн бұрын
@@butchez73 I'm not sure what happened to my comment...I realized I needed to change a word and went back it was gone lol Either way I have pics but you can google Edward C. Browder and Isham Bell Browder...pictures and history comes up. My great aunt was the head of Dallas Heritage society and donated millions to Old City Park for years to keep it open. Because of her we have learned a lot about our family way way back. She has passed and now they are destroying the park. I have a picture of The Browder store the inside with the original employees back in 1800...7th oldest picture ever taken in Dallas Texas. Thank you!
@cmc037
@cmc037 Ай бұрын
Are you sure you want to move to Fort Worth? Its already crowded.
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn Ай бұрын
The 1957 tornado did not stop in Oak Cliff. After crossing the Trinity, it went up Denton Road next to Love Field and then crossed Northwest Highway. At the time, I was riding my bicycle past the Safeway store on Lover's Lane west of Inwood. It was not raining there, so I was flabbergasted to look to the west and see in the distance the funnel with rooftops and billboards swirling in the air around it. I rode my bicycle over to Bachman Lake and viewed some of the houses on Shorecrest which had lost their roofs. One of the houses had its kitchen area exposed to the street, and I noticed that a coconut was sitting apparently undisturbed on the kitchen table. The actual death toll from that tornado was 10 people. The Dallas tornado of 2019 also missed me by a couple of miles, but it pretty much destroyed Thomas Jefferson High School, which I attended along with classmate Michael Nesmith. My dad graduated Dallas High School in 1936. I learned to swim in the YMCA pool downtown, and also at Kidd Springs and Lake Cliff. Around 1948 I was one of the neighborhood kids who gathered to watch the assembly of the prefabricated Lustron home, made of porcelain painted steel panels, on Amherst Street. The selling point was that it was termite proof and would never need painting. I suppose that was correct, as the house is still there and still looks exactly the same as when new. My sister and I were passengers on the last streetcar to take a ceremonial trip across the Trinity from Oak Cliff to downtown. We also helped turn shovels of soil at the groundbreaking for construction of the new (second) chapel for Lover's Lane Methodist Church, when it actually was on Lover's Lane. Question: Why no mention of Nesmith, Meatloaf, Lisa Loeb and Noah Jones as successful musicians from Dallas?
@MartyOwen-ts4eq
@MartyOwen-ts4eq 2 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr.Collins , very good👍
@MartyOwen-ts4eq
@MartyOwen-ts4eq 2 ай бұрын
What was the actress?name and there was television in the late 40s published adds of tv in1947.
@Truerealism747
@Truerealism747 4 ай бұрын
Ocd causes somatic symptoms disorder
@scottwiseman8015
@scottwiseman8015 7 ай бұрын
Bryan's cabin, when I was a boy in the 60's, was located on it's original spot in the S.W. corner of the Old Red Courthouse lawn. It was moved to current location when the county built the parking garage for the new courthouse and jail across on Commerce St. now called George Allen Court's Building. My dad's sister worked for an insurance company in the Cotton Exchange Building. My paternal grandpa owned a Gulf Station on East Grand Av. where the West bound service road is now of I-30. My Pops was a deputy sheriff in Dallas and he said that Sheriff W.E. (Bill) Decker told that when HE was a boy he would ride his pony out to the cemetery and look down on the city. That cemetery is at the Convention center right now. WOW! Out in the country. Now in the heart of Downtown. Hey great video and hope you have more to offer. 👍✌️😉🫡🤠
@richardcoronado4081
@richardcoronado4081 8 ай бұрын
My grandfather on my dad's side was born and raised in Dallas. Some of my relatives are still there. Dallas as a city always has a great story to tell.
@justicewaleford227
@justicewaleford227 9 ай бұрын
What about pleasant grove you mentioned the cliff but not the grove
@butchez73
@butchez73 9 ай бұрын
I designed this for my students at Sunset High School. So I left out stuff that I thought they wouldn't relate to.
@justicewaleford227
@justicewaleford227 9 ай бұрын
Can you do a video on Dallas farmland in and around Dallas past and present?
@justicewaleford227
@justicewaleford227 9 ай бұрын
Can you do a part 2
@butchez73
@butchez73 9 ай бұрын
I cannot. I'm just not that knowledgeable. I start with good pictures, then I try to say something clever.
@edrichard6153
@edrichard6153 9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Collins. This was a wonderful treat. I was born in 1955 so quite a bit of this I am seeing for the first time. My parents and grandparents told my siblings and I about Lake Cliff Park when it was such a big attraction. But your video included the first photo I had ever seen of it. The tornado of 1957 came down our street but it missed us. I don't remember it because I was only 2 years old but when I was older I heard what a big scary deal it was. You know, in the section where you mention some famous people from Dallas? Well, you just barely scratched the surface. We forgive you, of course. Oh yeah, my high school, Adamson and Sunset High School were big rivals in Dallas!. My parents AND grandparents graduated from Oak Cliff High School, which, as you mentioned, was renamed Adamson and I and some of my sibs graduated from there also. Thanks again for this!
@zhuliu
@zhuliu 10 ай бұрын
I am working on a hypothesis. Below are 18 statements I have made about Classical Conditioning, in no particular order. Some basic, some not, some redundant. Please apply your expert scrutiny and analyze for errors. Thank you. ---------------------------------- 1. Classical Conditioning happens when an unconditioned stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus. 2. The unconditioned stimulus can be pain or pleasure. 3. The degree of conditioning can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 4. The rapidity of conditioning can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 5. The number of repetitions (the frequency) required to create a conditioned response can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 6. Conditioned responses can be permanent/lifelong. 7. A conditioned response can be (deep enough to be) indistinguishable from an inborn trait. 8. None of Pavlov’s dogs escaped the conditioning. 9. All of Pavlov’s dogs became conditioned to salivate at the bell. 10. As an unconditioned stimulus, pleasure can condition as effectively as pain. 11. A pleasurable unconditioned stimulus can create a conditioned response that is pathological. 12. A conditioned response can also result from pairing two unconditioned stimuli. 13. When two unconditioned stimuli are paired, the less intense one can serve as the neutral stimulus. 14. A conditioned response can either be beneficial or harmful. 15. A pathological conditioned response can be created by pairing a pleasurable unconditioned stimulus with a painful unconditioned stimulus. 16. Classical Conditioning can happen naturally and spontaneously, or can be artificially inflicted by another person. 17. When unconditioned pleasure is paired with unconditioned pain, such as in domestic abuse, the conditioned response displays a confused equating of the two. 18. The generational cycle of child abuse conditions the mind of the victim by pairing the unconditioned pleasure of constant parental nurturing with the unconditioned pain of periodic abuse, where the pain also plays the role of the neutral stimulus.
@zhuliu
@zhuliu 10 ай бұрын
I am working on a hypothesis. Below are 18 statements I have made about Classical Conditioning, in no particular order. Some basic, some not, some redundant. Please apply your expert scrutiny and analyze for errors. Thank you. ---------------------------------- 1. Classical Conditioning happens when an unconditioned stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus. 2. The unconditioned stimulus can be pain or pleasure. 3. The degree of conditioning can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 4. The rapidity of conditioning can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 5. The number of repetitions (the frequency) required to create a conditioned response can be affected by the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus. 6. Conditioned responses can be permanent/lifelong. 7. A conditioned response can be (deep enough to be) indistinguishable from an inborn trait. 8. None of Pavlov’s dogs escaped the conditioning. 9. All of Pavlov’s dogs became conditioned to salivate at the bell. 10. As an unconditioned stimulus, pleasure can condition as effectively as pain. 11. A pleasurable unconditioned stimulus can create a conditioned response that is pathological. 12. A conditioned response can also result from pairing two unconditioned stimuli. 13. When two unconditioned stimuli are paired, the less intense one can serve as the neutral stimulus. 14. A conditioned response can either be beneficial or harmful. 15. A pathological conditioned response can be created by pairing a pleasurable unconditioned stimulus with a painful unconditioned stimulus. 16. Classical Conditioning can happen naturally and spontaneously, or can be artificially inflicted by another person. 17. When unconditioned pleasure is paired with unconditioned pain, such as in domestic abuse, the conditioned response displays a confused equating of the two. 18. The generational cycle of child abuse conditions the mind of the victim by pairing the unconditioned pleasure of constant parental nurturing with the unconditioned pain of periodic abuse, where the pain also plays the role of the neutral stimulus.
@davidcarper5411
@davidcarper5411 Жыл бұрын
Wit malt40 stoe rite next doe..
@simulationgf
@simulationgf Жыл бұрын
i got removed from the google classroom and it was really useful, could i be added back?
@danielfoltz5249
@danielfoltz5249 Жыл бұрын
First time visiting Dallas and this was great context! Thank you!
@blade8989
@blade8989 Жыл бұрын
Dbhxhd
@greeneyedmonster7806
@greeneyedmonster7806 Жыл бұрын
My great grandfather would take his cotton crop to sell in Dallas down Central Track. My dad would walk down Central Track to go to the state fair.
@perfectperson214
@perfectperson214 Жыл бұрын
When i was a kid in the 80’s downtown was a depressing place, not many people. My dad would tell me about how he used to walk across the Houston bridge by himself from a neighborhood called peanut flats at the base of the levy in oak cliff. He would sell oranges downtown. He said that everybody used to go downtown to shop or go to tha theatre, and that it was a very busy place. He saw a lot of crazy things happen, for example, some black children would put bottle caps between their toes and tap dance for money until their feet were bleeding. He was from NL Mexico. He had to tell people he was Spanish to avoid harassment. My dad owned The Letterpress Shop on Exposition across from the fair park entrance. RIP dad
@THE48LAWS
@THE48LAWS Жыл бұрын
This was great.
@CT-qx8nl
@CT-qx8nl 2 жыл бұрын
Dallas is a hot city, that's why the courthouses kept burning down lol
@butchez73
@butchez73 Жыл бұрын
And piles of cotton just sitting around!
@aflypoet
@aflypoet 2 жыл бұрын
Great video..thanks 👍
@chriskavin
@chriskavin 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this
@ridhamshah8475
@ridhamshah8475 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@UncleBuckRodgers
@UncleBuckRodgers 2 жыл бұрын
Chilis was demolished and is now a convenience store
@jenniferkarinamoralesbarre4412
@jenniferkarinamoralesbarre4412 2 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this very mucho thanks
@angelag6223
@angelag6223 2 жыл бұрын
in lakewood area of dallas, tx /apts on paulus n covington /lakewood apts in the 1970s/ pics ?
@butchez73
@butchez73 2 жыл бұрын
Sorry, I made this for my students and they wouldn't know that area of town.
@matrox
@matrox 2 жыл бұрын
7:55 They shut the playground down after the Democrats sued the city after a kid named Tommy broke a leg from the 20' fall.😁😆
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn Ай бұрын
Then as now, apparently, only Democrats care about the wellbeing of children.
@gm-classics
@gm-classics 2 жыл бұрын
Great video.. thanks for doing this for all of us dallasites.
@luannar.bonilla7864
@luannar.bonilla7864 2 жыл бұрын
And some of the trees that we still have amongst the city or some of the well-known trees that they hung people from and I don't even know what kind of people or who
@butchez73
@butchez73 2 жыл бұрын
I do mention verbally to my students that there were lynchings in Dallas
@luannar.bonilla7864
@luannar.bonilla7864 2 жыл бұрын
Oak cliff in Dallas was owned by a rapest and child molestation
@jennifersuzannebk5149
@jennifersuzannebk5149 2 жыл бұрын
Shout out to grandpa David R.I.P officer of the law.
@nicoleriviello1328
@nicoleriviello1328 3 жыл бұрын
this is very useful. many thanks. greetings from Barbados
@laddpalmore7522
@laddpalmore7522 3 жыл бұрын
Lightning Hopkins and t-bone walker are from Houston not dallas
@butchez73
@butchez73 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I'll fix some day.
@laddpalmore7522
@laddpalmore7522 3 жыл бұрын
Lightning Hopkins and t-bone walker are from Houston not dallas. That's Kool you have em' there though with dallas native blind lemon Jefferson.
@butchez73
@butchez73 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir. I'll fix it next time around.
@meadowlane79
@meadowlane79 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, impressive collection
@joshtherook
@joshtherook 3 жыл бұрын
I believe that is Dallas Fire Station 15… and the Gypsy Tea has just been torn down…
@butchez73
@butchez73 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I'll fix it someday
@deplorablepocdetejas1989
@deplorablepocdetejas1989 3 жыл бұрын
I had a elementary school teacher in East Dallas, a Great Teacher, that grew up living and picking cotton as a little girl before the land was flooded to make Lake Ray Hubbard. I also remember when central 75 was smaller, the end of little mexico before changed to victory plaza, the first chili's, Town East first built and Big Town mall - movie theater and bowling alley. Btw, Spanky of the OG little rascals lived in Lancaster and his grand mother lived behind Texas theater in oak cliff.
@chkilou
@chkilou 3 жыл бұрын
Great presentation thank you sir!
@billmerrick2467
@billmerrick2467 3 жыл бұрын
I moved to Dallas/South Oak Cliff as a teenager in 1966. Married in 68 and moved to Duncanville. Live in Red Oak now. Dallas was a great place back in the day. Now it SUCKS.
@butchez73
@butchez73 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, Red Oak is a paradise.
@ellentuton7642
@ellentuton7642 3 жыл бұрын
Bishop & Davis
@ellentuton7642
@ellentuton7642 3 жыл бұрын
Pix of standing Lee in downtown by convention center
@nickv1150
@nickv1150 3 жыл бұрын
Great slideshow! Thanks!!
@shlinky6527
@shlinky6527 3 жыл бұрын
MJ that was funny
@shiftintohigh5564
@shiftintohigh5564 3 жыл бұрын
Dallas, a one horse town. Pegasus. Oswald didnt shoot JFK. btw.
@jasonnelson316
@jasonnelson316 3 жыл бұрын
Great slideshow. A lot of info that I didn't know.
@smdftb8495
@smdftb8495 3 жыл бұрын
The building at 10th and Tyler isn't a Gloria's. In fact, it looks just like the picture. Great slide deck btw. Very interesting!
@butchez73
@butchez73 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I'll correct it one day.
@smdftb8495
@smdftb8495 3 жыл бұрын
@@butchez73 I was actually just telling my family that I watched a cool ppt of a bunch of historical areas in Dallas. We just moved here from Arkansas in late summer 2017. We might use this as a map of places to check out. Thanks man!
@butchez73
@butchez73 3 жыл бұрын
@@smdftb8495 thanks!
@joegerich641
@joegerich641 3 жыл бұрын
I was right.
@joegerich641
@joegerich641 3 жыл бұрын
One of those two books you read i would imagine was case closed . lol